82 INDIANS OF THE SOUTHWEST. 
and railroads brought other styles and cheaper mate- 
rials. 
In the northeast, at Taos, Picuris, and Pecos, skins 
were almost, if not quite exclusively worn. The men 
were described as wearing small shirts with fringes, and 
robes of buffalo skin decorated with painted designs. 
The women’s clothing of these particular pueblos is not 
mentioned at an early date but at the present time the 
TTT 
eg . * : 5 < o* 
Hopi Robe. 
long deerskin dresses of the Plains type are occasion- 
ally seen at Taos. The dress of the men at this pueblo 
is hardly to be distinguished from that worn by the 
Indians of the Plains; long leggings, of fringed deer- 
skin, or of red or blue flannel, are still generally worn. 
The breech cloth of similar flannel is wide and long, 
hanging nearly to the ground. Deerskin shirts, which 
are less common, are of the usual Plains types. 
—— 2 SS TE 
